in last 1930 depression DJIA dump did happen but GOLD stock kept its demand UP -

history often repeat itself -

GOLD PRICE WILL RISE TO MULTIPLES OF THE CURRENT PRICE - ALLOCATED GOLD SCANDAL HIT -

GOLD WILL BREAK RANKS FROM THE PAPER CLUTCHES -

PHONY PRICE DISCOVERY METHODS -

THE GOLD PRICE WILL EASE PAST THE $5000 PER OUNCE MARK -

TAKE SILVER ON A GREAT UPWARD RIDE -

THE BANKERS WILL HAVE TO REPLACE THE GOLD -

BY OPEN MARKET PURCHASES AS RESTITUTION -

The events will continue to occur in a sequence - probably managed much more than we are told - a new sheriff is in town - who stepped off jetplane - few months ago from an Eastern location - suspect the Western castle dwellers are staging - systemic collapse in order to impose - new centralized government - not be pretty, nor permit rights or liberty - be described as a debt slavery serfdom - Western strategy is backfiring - de-centralization is occurring - the exact opposite - primary secure safe haven is Gold - always has been Gold - always will be Gold - The experiment since 1971 when the Gold Standard - was unilaterally broken by the United States - is coming to a conclusion - wreckage is complete and a great tragedy - new system will emerge - LIBOR LAWSUITS - attorneys and aggrieved victims are lined up - perhaps over 900 thousand lawsuits will come - how many adjustable rate mortgages were arranged - from 2005 to 2009, with underwriting banks - serving the complaints - army of US legal beagles is on the job - lost income to the victims is obvious - lawsuits will eventually target the central banks - fraud reaches into the $trillions easily - the derivatives will be factored in - $trillions in volume times percentages skimmed illegally - mainstream press carefully avoids such topics - GOOGLE search of "municipal lawsuits LIBOR" produce >21.1 million hits - story will be gathering momentum - be in the headlines a year from now -

Demand and supply factors remain in gold’s favour.

There is strong demand from store of wealth buyers in Europe, China, the Middle East and the rest of Asia – not to mention strong demand from institutions and central banks.